Ask PharmacyChecker

All pharmacies in the PharmacyChecker Verification Program,
which include those on the PharmacyChecker.com list of approved
online pharmacies, require a valid prescription from your doctor or other licensed prescriber. None of the pharmacies in our program offer remote medical consultations, also referred to as "online consultations" or "online prescribing," as a basis for issuing a prescription. If you're ordering medication from a PharmacyChecker-approved pharmacy, you will be required to provide the pharmacy with a prescription that you obtained from your doctor or other licensed prescriber.

There are many rogue online
pharmacies that offer bogus remote medical consultations, either meaning there is no real doctor or the consultation is inadequate to lawfully prescribe medication. Keep in mind that online pharmacies without verification from a reputable program, many that don't' require a prescription at all, are more likely to be scams, send you fake or substandard medication and put your health at risk.

In the U.S., Telemedicine,
online physician consultation, is becoming more popular; however, regulatory
oversight of telemedicine differs widely from state to state. PharmacyChecker.com
only allows online pharmacies that offer remote prescribing consultations to
become members of our program if the practice is expressly permitted by U.S.
law in the state where the online consultation occurs.

Unfortunately, people with substance abuse problems try to
buy controlled substances online without having a valid prescription to do so,
which can be very dangerous. The Ryan Haight Online Pharmacy Consumer
Protection Act makes it a federal crime to sell controlled substances, such as
opiate-based prescription drugs like Vicodin, Oxycodone and Fentanyl, over the
Internet unless the online pharmacy has special permission to do so. States in
which online prescribing is lawful do not generally extend that permission to
controlled substances.

PharmacyChecker.com does not allow membership to pharmacies
that sell controlled substances in the U.S. without the proper licensure from
the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and full compliance with the Ryan Haight Act.
International pharmacies that export controlled substances to customers in the
U.S. are banned from our program entirely.

Disclaimer:This information is neither intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, nor is it an endorsement of any product or service. If you are considering purchasing medication from outside the U.S., be aware that, in most circumstances, it is technically not legal for individuals to import prescription drugs; however, U.S. government officials have stated that individuals who order non-controlled prescription drugs from Canada or other foreign sources (up to a three-month supply) for their own use are not being pursued or prosecuted.